Nottingham Post

Freddie can coach England, says Key

- CRICKET

ANDREW Flintoff has been tipped as a future England head coach by director of men’s cricket Rob Key.

Key, a close friend of the former all-rounder, has been integral in offering the 2005 Ashes hero a path back from showbusine­ss to elite sport after the Ashes hero suffered serious facial injuries in a car crash while filming Top Gear.

Flintoff accepted Key’s invitation to anonymousl­y attend games at last year’s Ashes series and has since accepted mentoring roles with England’s whiteball side as well as the England Lions and Under-19s.

He will further build his CV by leading the Headingley­based Northern Supercharg­ers in The Hundred this summer and has been inked in to assist Matthew Mott at the T20 World Cup in June.

With fans and players alike welcoming the return of one of the country’s most popular figures of recent times, he is already being spoken about as a possible successor and Key can see why.

“Without question, I think he would be an excellent head coach,” Key said.

“He will be a worthy candidate going forward.

“When that time comes and whoever is in this job, and it might be outside of my time, they would be stupid not to look at him. For all the things he has done, cricket is always the thing he goes back to. Like all of us, it is the thing we know better than anything else and the thing we love.

“It is almost like he has no choice. It is what he thinks about the most after his family.”

Key praised Flintoff’s ability to understand the highs and lows of internatio­nal cricket and sees him as a natural working with the the current crop.

“Flintoff is a leader like (Ben) Stokes. He is not going to need to learn leadership qualities,” said Key.

“He has those in abundance, which is what you need at the top level. He has that empathy that Stokes has as well as being a great player.

“He knows what it is like to nick off and to struggle.

“All these things as a leader, your interactio­ns with people, mean you can impact people in a positive or negative way with everything you do.

“Fred is aware of that, and not many are aware of that, and he understand­s how to use that gift with people.”

Meanwhile, Surrey’s director of cricket Alec Stewart is to step down after 11 years in the role.

The 60-year-old, who has overseen three County Championsh­ip titles, will leave at the end of the year.

“Without a doubt, this has been the toughest decision of my working career,” said Stewart, whose associatio­n with Surrey stretches back to youth cricket before he signed his first profession­al contract in 1981.

Anti-discrimina­tion videos using British Sign Language will be screened by the ECB at all first-class grounds this summer.

Joel Harris and Jake Oakes from the England Deaf team helped teach BSL to over 70 men’s and women’s players from across the country, with the results set to be shown at domestic and internatio­nal matches in the 2024 season.

Harris, an Ashes winner in Australia in 2022, said: “It’s about helping people be more aware.”

 ?? ?? Andrew Flintoff has been working with the England white ball team
Andrew Flintoff has been working with the England white ball team

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